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Sandy Bridge reworked the way clock generation is done. There are now 13 [[phase-locked loop|PLLs]] driving independent clock domains for the individual cores, the cache slices, the integrated graphics, the {{intel|System Agent}}, and the four independent I/O regions. The goal was ensuring uniformity and consistency across all clock domains.
 
Sandy Bridge reworked the way clock generation is done. There are now 13 [[phase-locked loop|PLLs]] driving independent clock domains for the individual cores, the cache slices, the integrated graphics, the {{intel|System Agent}}, and the four independent I/O regions. The goal was ensuring uniformity and consistency across all clock domains.
  
A single external reference clock is provided by the {{intel|Platform Control Hub}} (PCH) chip. The {{intel|BCLK}}, the System Bus Clock which dates back to the {{intel|FSB}}, is now the reference clock which has been set to 100 MHz. Note that this has changed from 133 MHz in previous architectures. The BCLK is the reference edge for all the clock domains. Because the core slices and the integrated graphics have variable frequency which {{intel|turbo boost|scales with workloads}} and voltage requirements, the Slice PLLs and GPU PLL sit behind their own 100 MHz Reference Spine. This was done to ensure clock skew is minimized as much as possible over the different power planes. Intel used low [[jitter]] PLLs (long term jitter σ < 2ps is reported) in addition to the vertical clock spines and embedded [[clock compensator]]s to achieve good [[clock skew]] performance which was measured at 16 [[picoseconds|ps]].
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A single external reference clock is provided by the {{intel|Platform Control Hub}} (PCH) chip. The {{intel|BCLK}}, the System Bus Clock which dates back to the {{intel|FSB}}, is now the reference clock which has been set to 100 MHz. Note that this has changed from 133 MHz in previous architectures. The BCLK is the reference edge for all the clock domains. Because the core slices and the integrated graphics have variable frequency which {{intel|turob boost|scales with workloads}} and voltage requirements, the Slice PLLs and GPU PLL sit behind their own 100 MHz Reference Spine. This was done to ensure clock skew is minimized as much as possible over the different power planes. Intel used low [[jitter]] PLLs (long term jitter σ < 2ps is reported) in addition to the vertical clock spines and embedded [[clock compensator]]s to achieve good [[clock skew]] performance which was measured at 16 [[picoseconds|ps]].
  
 
The System Agent PLL generates a variety of frequencies for the different zones like the PCU, SA, and Display Engine. Additionally, a seperate 133 MHz reference clock is also generated for main memory system.
 
The System Agent PLL generates a variety of frequencies for the different zones like the PCU, SA, and Display Engine. Additionally, a seperate 133 MHz reference clock is also generated for main memory system.

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codenameSandy Bridge (client) +
core count2 + and 4 +
designerIntel +
first launchedSeptember 13, 2010 +
full page nameintel/microarchitectures/sandy bridge (client) +
instance ofmicroarchitecture +
instruction set architecturex86-64 +
manufacturerIntel +
microarchitecture typeCPU +
nameSandy Bridge (client) +
phase-outNovember 2012 +
pipeline stages (max)19 +
pipeline stages (min)14 +
process32 nm (0.032 μm, 3.2e-5 mm) +